ee ene pip cg aN A Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, May 25, 1964 ie, £2 Ms tape 76s A Hel ei ion uh inn atin ate aan dan San din dBkn. i ln, AED Me. SNe, HE 2 GOOD EVENING ' -- By JACKGEARIN -- Buffalo SIU Gets Thanks From Banks FESTIVAL OF MUSIC DRAWS PRAISE : -. Trustee Mrs. Clayton Lee of the Board of Education has called the attention of this department to an important up- coming event. _ It's the annual Spring Festival of Music which is to be held in the R. S. McLaughlin Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. next Wednesday ' i To understand the magni- tude of this event -- 1,200 children from 23 Oshawa Public Schools will take part under direction of Wallace Young, supervisor of Music in Public Schools. Mrs. George Drynan will assist. Mrs. Lee, as Festival chairman, writes: "Our schools ate becom- ing more and more the cen- tre of many influences which feach out and enrich home | and civic. life. Prominent among these influences is music. One is impressed by the results of music teach- ing in our schools, and the fine training received. I MRS. C. LES have long believed that a school music program should have some carry-over to the community -- this festival provides such an opportunity. "Hf our nation is to become musical, it must be through the work of our schools. The nation with a love of music probably possesses the greatest single resource for a happy and wholesome life." SIX SEEK LIQUOR LICENCES IN CITY The following will make application for licences at a special meeting of the Liquor Licence Board of Ontario in Peterborough, Friday, June 12: Hotel Lancaster (Oshawa) Ltd, for a lounge licence (cocktails) and dining lounge licenés (liquor with meals.) McCrohans and Co. Lid. for a lounge licence and dining lounge licence fot the Central Hotel, Oshawa. Hotel Genosha (Oshawa) for a dining lounge licence for sale and consumption of liquor with meals and a lounge licence for sale and consumption of liquor. The Oshawa Curling Club (Inc.) for club licence for sale and consumption of liquor with or without meais. The Oshawa Naval Veterans Club, 20 Viola street, for'a club licence (restricted) for sale and consumption of beer and wine with meals, Hotel Ajax Lid., carrying on business as Fleetwood Motor Hotel, Oshawa (a proposed two-storey building to be erected at the corner of Simcoe street south and Bloor street east), Ajax Hotel Ltd., per Harry Finer, secretary-treasurer, 343 King street east, Oshawa. REGIMENTAL BAND PLANS SUMMER CONCERTS MEMO TO MUSIC LOVERS: The Band of the Ontario Regiment -- Oshawa's pride and joy -- will soon resume its summer concerts in the band- shell in Memorial Park, where it has performed yearly since 1941, The band is deep in rich tradition (its history dates back to 1860); also, it has performed before thousands at home afd abroad in recent years. Alderman Hayward Murdoch said today that work would start soon on the repair-paint job on the bandshell donated to the City by Col. R..S. McLaughlin, the band's honorary patron. . The sum of $3,850 has been set aside for this work which is to be completed in time for the opening concert -- séven local contractors were offered an opportunity to bid on this work, but were too busy. The shell hasn't been paint- ed for four years. PARKING BYLAW IRKS SIMCOE SOUTH RESIDENT William B. Hambley, 1278 Simcoe street south, takes strong exception to the City's new two-hour parking limit for Simcoe south, south of Ritson, He writes: "South Simcoe residents below Ritson have little parking- space, yet Council has passed new restrictions. "This creates a serious problem. The idea of 'no park- BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- Hal C. Banks, ousted president ot the Seafarers' International Un- ion of Canada (Ind.), was hon- ored in absentia Sunday night by local longshoremen for "out- standing service to labor." Banks, free in Canada on $25,- 000 cash bail while awaiting the hearing of an appeal against an assault conspiracy conviction that carried a five-year prison term, forwarded by telegraph from Montreal his a er to the Great Lakes district of the International Longshore- men's Association. Although Canadian authorities had not refused Banks permis. sion to cross the border, he de- cided not to come to Buffalo for fear he would be stopped and his bail revoked, In the telegram, Banks said he accepted the award "with ex- treme chagrin and regret' be- cause legal entanglements pre- vented his attendance. ACCEPTED BY HALL The award was accepted in |Banks' behalf' by Paul Hall of |Brooklyn, president of the In iternational Seafarers. "We have no intention of mak- ling a martyr out of Banks, nor lof hollering frameup," Hall said.. He charged that the court conviction of Banks arising from lan alleged assault incident sev-| ee years ago, beclouds the |"real basic issue." | He described the issue as pres- sure to curb the free labor |movement. | The longshoremen's president, | David M. Connors, had said ear- lier the award cites Banks for "outstanding service to labor." | \He said that, because of Banly' efforts, 'the Canadian seaman ranks as one of the best paid, quartered and fed sailors in the world." aia a 3 ae - sages gesting sat aCe pte pian mse yer eared ee -- oe - he " YOUR HEART HAS NINE LIVES: PART 6 By ALTON BLAKESLEE and JEREMIAH STAMLER, MD "Hard work never hurt a healthy eart." So declares Dr. Paul Dudley White, eminent heart special- ist wWio treated President Eisenhowey during his heart attack, and who religiously follows his own advice by taking vigorous daily exer- cisé, Dr. White has powerful -com- pany in a growing legion of specialists and physicians who endorse regulare xetcise and physical activity asp art of a general prescription to protect the heart and help prevent premature heart attacks and strokes, Exercise provides much more than a way of spending calories to help control weight, Research as turned | up inereasing evidence as to WHY exercise may protect the human heart. Man began as a_ physically active animal, the roving food gatherer, hunter, fisherman and farmer; through te ages he relied on his muscles and strength as well as his wits for survival. But now, in civilized coun- tries at least, seductive changes in our way of life have made many of us quite sedentary. Machines and gad- gets do the work our muscles once performed. Nowadays, "most of us don't wear out -- we rust out', ob- serves Dr. Theodore G. Klumpp of New York City, a student of aging and dedicated tennis player at age 60. "But we are still steking the human furnace as we did when muscle power made the world go orund." Inactivity has been encour- aged by mythology about dan- gers ofe xercise, and by. the appeal of humor -- "The only | WEATHER FORECAST 'Hot Air Returns Again Tuesday | Forecasts issued by the Tor- {onto weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Considerable sun- shine is expected in the cooler air mass today and afternoon |temperatures should reach yal- ues normal for this time of year. Warmer weather will re- turn to the district on Tuesday as.a southerly ta southwesterly flow again develops over the | province. Lake St. Lake Clair, Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- burton, Georgian Bay, Hamil- ton, North Bay, Sudbury, Tor- onto: Sunny and warmer Tues- day. Winds light tonight and Tuesday. White River, able cloudiness Tuesday. Winds Tuesday. Timagami, able cloudiness Tuesday. Winds Algoma: Vari- and warmer southerly Cochrane: Vari- and warmer light tonight \Lake Huron, Windsor, London: | southerly 15 on Tuesday., Sunny. and warmer Winds light tonight and Tues- day. |Bomb-Hurt Boy Out Of Danger Tuesday.! TORONTO (CP) Marine forecasts issued by the Toronto, _/weather office in Toronto at 8:30 a.m. Mnday, valid until 11 a.m, EDT Tuesday. Lake Superir: Winds erly 10 to 15 knots, becoming south to southwest 15 to 25 knots) today, Fair tonight this afternoon. cloudy with chance of a few isolated thun-| dershowers. 15) | vive. south After Operation é*:irva." " KINGSTON (CP) -- Peter|Lake Erie: Winds northwesterly Provencher, 18, who had both)20 to 30 knots, decreasing to 10 hands amputated when a home-|to 15 late this afternoon and be- made bomb exploded and killed|coming variable near 10 knts Georgian Bay,| exercise I getis as a pall- bearer at the funerals of friends who exercise." d The myth that exercise kills is perpetuated because we oc- easionally rad of men drop- ping dead on the golf or ten- nis court, or while shoveling snow. Overlooked is the fact that only about two per cent of heart attacks occur during strenuous activity: Fifty per cent actually occur . during rest- or sleep -- which doesn't make sleeping danger- ous. Another myth is that exer- cise is useless because it makes you hungrier, so you eat more. Experiments and studies with man and animals repeatedly. have shown that those with te lightest food intake are those who engage in moderate physical activity. SHOULD YOU SLOW DOWN? Another myth is that exer- cisé is hopeless because you must walk 3 5miles to lose one pound of fat. But nobody insists you walk the 35 miles in a single day. Spread it out, walking one extra mile a day, and in 35 days you can burn up a pound of fat, or 10 pounds in a year. Did you eat, in one day, all the extra 3.500 claories repre. sented by one pound of fat? Still another myth is that men must slow down at 40. This really was the general medical advice and. fashion years ago. Since then, medi- cal science has advanced in its knowledge of the workings and needs of the human body, and what benefits might be gained from regular exercise. When you exercise or work physically hard, your heart must work harder and more e'ficiently to distribute blood everywhere. including to its own muscular tissues. "This helps develop what is known as collateral circulation -- a richer, more extensive net- work of blood channels to as- sure a good supply to allareas of the heart muscle. When a heart attack occurs from blockage of an artery, the heart tries to establish col- lateral circulation, actually growing new small blood ves- ses and capiaries to take bood to the deprived area. The heart which as alreadv been challenged by extra work or activity has, to an extent, already taken this step. It is alreadv prepared to meet an emergency. In England, bus drivers sit- ting behind their wheels were found to have a higher inci- dence of heart attacks than conductors running up and down. stevs on double-decker buses, When initial heart at- | tacks did strike, the condue- |¢ tors were more likely to sur- $s The same difference was | noted in the post#! service-- a higher rate among seden- tary clerks than among mail- men trudging their rounds. Some studies of American workers have also found fewer attacks among men physical- ly active on their jobs, as, for rxample, among farmers in North Dakota compared with non-fanmers. Among railroad men, clerks | suffered death rates DOUBLE | that of more active switch- men, or men working on main- tenance of way. Exercise Protects -- In studies at Kent State Unt- versity in Ohio, when men working in sedentary occupa- tions were put through a pro- ram of regular exercises, their blood cholesterol levels declined. None of the men changd his diet in any way. Some authorities think there is a beneficial effect from exercise in stimulating the thyroid gland, the "'pace- maker" governing metabolism so fats (and cholesterol) are burned up more speedily in the bloodstream. There is evi- dence that exercise hips th body dispos of fats consumed in foods. Almost certainly exercise and physical exertion can help us handle. many menial stresses, Musculat work pro- vides an outlet for the 'ten- sions that inevitably build up within us, and helps us relax physically and mentally. In adut life, it is never too late.to begin to improve over an existing poor physical con- dition. A thorough medical checkup is an essential first step, to learn what you can safely do, f Any program of improve- ment or restoration should of | course begin slowly and mild- ly, building up to greater' en- durance ability. Once started, the activity should be con- tinued, preferably daily: The best activity or sport for you is a matter of preference, convenience, availability, and your physical condition. One problem may be current social disbelief that you real- ly want to exercise. In exclusive Beverly Hills, Caif., a psychiatrist who likes to take a constitutional walk at night was repeatedly stop- ped by police alert for sus- picious characters. He solved edifficulfy by buying a dog to take along his walks. He wasn't bothered again, because everyone knows that a DOG needs exercise. Tuesday: Tensions and Stress) (Condensed from 'Your Heart Has Nine Livés", pub- lished by Prentice Hall, copy- se Sak Ae int iat as a as eat a right 1964 by Alton Blakeslee) |social council. Flag Fus OTTAWA (CP)--A split in| party lines in the Conservative, ranks--and perhaps among gov- ernment backbenchers as well-- is shaping up as the govern- ment --prepares to unfurl its choice for a maple leaf flag for Canada this week. Quebec. Conservative leader Leon Balcer has promised to support the Liberal govern. ment's maple leat design--de- apite the insistence of his chief, Opposition Leader Diefenbaker, that the Red Ensign is Cana- da's flag. Mr. Balcer said in an inter- view during a Young Progres- sive Conservative Association study conference in Hamilton Friday that he favors a new Ca- nadian flag based on a maple leaf motif. | a la li Nia i il "i Ta ies Ta i s Seen Splitting ; Party Ranks In Ottawa He said the Red Ensign is not |givings materialized in Com- distinctive. And he claimed sup-/mons voting may depend on port from most Quebec Con-/how the government preserves servative MPs for his view be-|the Red Ensign as the hind the maple leaf flag. lof Canada's association in the Prime Minister Pearson has\Comm On wealth, while "still" promised to unveil the design of adopting a qiffe the new flag in the Commons later this week. It will be em-. es Ae 2 resolution placed be- fused to onthe fag 'ore ou: , | /etendum: on * Cian fer neprovad 'sisting that a vote in the MAJORITY ASSURED imons reflects the views of all The government seems as- Canadians. sured of majority ria | Seniey North, The prime minister has .re- t inthe In Saskatoon, Commons -- with indications of Knowles, New support from the New Demo-|merhber' for Wisnipes, crats, Social Credit MPs, Cred-|Centre, said the mete passage itistes--and Mr. Balcer and his'of a resolution by Pariiament® Queec supporters. won't settle the flag issue. However, some Liberal MPs. "General acceptance can' are understood to be leery about|come through time," he at the new flag. Whether their miss press conference. | | Tariff Talkers ada, the United States and eight! other big trading countries Sun- day handed the United Nations trade conference here their own) plan to keep trade expanding. | The other sponsors are Brit-| ain, Japan, West Germany, France, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands and Belgium. Their draft resolution was worked. out after long discus- sions with 11 countries repre- senting the 5. less-developed countries which have been call- ing fora new international trade organization. It proposes: 1, A United Nations trade con- ference meeting every three years--more often if necéssary --to deal with the problems of Jeconomic development of the developing countries. 2. A standing committee of the jconference, called the "commis- |sion for international trade," iwhich would report to the United Nations General Assem- bly through the economic and uch as has been 'olumbia; Newfoundland He described reactionary la-| yelopment. bor legislation as that designed by anti-labor groups to bring ; se indus A ocak thd shine URL. ing close industry and labor co. | Everything the labor moye-| sovernment iment has won for Canadian |workers could be lost, he told)yhon needed. delegates to the education insti-| tute of London and District La- bor Council being held at the University of. Western Ontario. Jodoin Warns Of Anti-Labor Laws LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Claude | |Jodoin, Canadian Labor Con-|some employers, union mem- igress president, Saturday said|bers cannot forget the need for jreactionary labor legislation) strong union leadership, he said. recently| jsought--andg granted--in British|tion of industries at the highest andlevel coupled with strong union |Alberta points out the need for/and government initiative in the Canadian labor movement to|both short and long-range plan- {continue counter-measures, Because of the attitude of He urged strong representa- jning for Canada's economic de- He clarified this by advocat- operation with a minimum of interference but information and advice jwith GENEVA (Reuters) -- Can-) ° | Mr. Jodoin, a native of Que-! é ve met MOWEST JET FARES © TORONTO WANCOUVER CANADIAN PACIFIC Canadian Pacific flies nothing but jets across Canada. Only $198 Totonte --Vancouver, round trip economy, -- $20 less than any other airline. Super DC-8 Jet leaves Toronto 9:35a.m. daily. Arrives Vancouver 12:10 p.m. (local time). Also to Winnipeg and Montreal. First class or economy, food and service is the finest. Call your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office. In Toronto phone EM 6-7531, "Talk Cracific TRAINS / TRUCKS / SHIPS / PLANES / MOTELS /TELECOMMUNICATIONS WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE Oshawa---Whitby---Brooklin 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY PHONE $68-3304 |bec, viewed the current separa- \tist furore as the work of "'ir- |responsible politicians and a mi- |nority group." every 16 in Saskatchewan was|Publicity the separatists are involved in a traffic. accident in 1963, TRAFFIC REPORT | REGINA (CP)--One driver in| He criticized the amount of getting. | the provincial highway| Anti-separatist Canadians, he MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH PHONE 723-9441 \Canadian flag for the country, -- poll the nation in @ tef-. the Com: ing' in this area is ridiculous -- a bylaw should serve a good purpose, It should not "merely be an irritant, incon- venience. traffic board says in its annual|said, should start saying so, report. There are about 400,000, "I'm not saying we should) ~ drivers in the province and 25,-\beat the drums and form or- 000 were involved in accidents.| ganizations but it is about time ja friend Friday night, was re-|this evening: becoming south- ported in fair condition and out! erly 10 to 20 knots early Mon- | of danger Sunday. day: fair. DEATHS "Take these so-called boulevards -- they resemble the gravelled portion of a road in the country (No. 7 or No. 2 Highways, or Brock stteet, Whitby, where parking is allow- ed.) "My conception of a boulevard is a grassy plot of ground with a cement curb separating it from the street, "Secondly, we should look at 'the safety angle -- can a car park safely on these shoulders, I say it can. The people who use this street are residents, or Lakeview commuters, It isn't a rush-hour traffic. Houses on the east side are few in number, set far back from the road and thus giving any driver a clear view. "A petition was taken up asking Council to reconsider and allow parking on one side, preferably the east. We got a hearing, but three weeks later a motion was passed en- dorsing two-hour parking on the east side. The reason for this limit was no prevyent trucks from parking in this area, also to prevent overnight parking. "Such excuses are flimsy. The City need only enforce existing bylaws. Trucks are now allowed to park in a resi- demtial area and overnight parking is not permitted on any have enough municipal problems without adding this ridicu- lous bylaw. Our protest is endorsed by every home-owner in the block, both sides and a good number living south of Kawartha." street, } Residents down here didn't get a af shake -- they trade | |Gordon, 17, was treated for a | | Richard Fort, 17, son of Lt.- inds ; . 1 5 ie Lake Ontario: Winds north- oni. and Mrs Thomas C. Fort westerly 25 to 40 knots, decreas- of Kingston, was killed and Glen ing to northwesterly 15 to 25 knts and becoming variable near 10 knots tonight; fair. Frecast temperatures: slight cut to one of_his ears af- ter the bomb the three youths on 56, president of Central By THE CANADIAN PRESS Hull, Que, -- Stewart Bates, 5 Mort- gage and Housing Corporation; of a heart attack suffered in a restaurant. An average of one of every 85) those who believe in Canada| drivers was involved in an acci-jstarted saying so with no hesi- dent resulting in death or injury.|tation," | Kingston drug stores jwere assembling exploded |the back porch of the Proven- loher home. The Gordon youth told police jthey were screwing cast iron }eaps to the ends of a galvanized |pipe when the bomb exploded. |Provencher was taken to hospi- tal where his hands were am- putated and he underwent ab- dominal surgery. Provincial police said they believe scientific curiosity was responsible for the accident. A. polee spokesman said all \three youths were Kingston high |school students and had enough |knowledge of physics and chem- istry to realize they could con- }eoct gun powder by mixing the proper ingredients. BOUGHT IN STORES Cpl. Gordon Grant, investigat- ing officer, said the ingredients| for the bomb were purchased in and the Lof tonight, high Tuesday: Windsor ... oe 5 7 London .. oo Kitchener Mount Forest ..++. Hamilton ° St. Catharines ..... Toronto .....++ Peterborough . Trenton ... Killaloe Muskoka .. North Bay ..... voee Sault Ste. Marie ... Kapuskasing ...... TIMMINS ...seseeee Ciudad Victoria, Mexico -- | deLesseps 5. Morrison, 52, one- jtime "boy wonder'? mayor of | New Orleans and the late pres- ident Kennedy's ambassador to the Organization of American | States; in a plane crash. | Antwerp -- Alex de Vries, 45, Belgian concert pianist, | Toronto -- Gordon F. Perry, | industrialist and horseman who |} had been chairman of the board | of Canadian Oil Companies Lim- ited and president of the Royal Winter Fair from 1936 to 1947; of a heart attack. ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING Aluminum Combination STORM-SCREEN eeeeeten ALUMINUM AWNINGS 4 Canadian | Common Mart Said Dangero HAMILTON (€P) -- Ontario Young Conservatives were told Free with the Us, youths conducted a number of would overcome Canada's \*mall explosions the night be- "small domestic market" prob. fore the fatal accident. lems, he said, but it was diffi, CP. Douglas Lambert, a cult to believe the U.S. would "cighbor of the Provenchers, | give special concessions to Said he warned the boys they wealthy Canada and not tolwere "playing with dynamite poor:r countries. Thursday night-when he saw Dean Macdonald said it was them with smaller bombs. He said they blew up a cement block that held a_ clothesline put Pole on that night. wrong to assume Americans and Canadians are the same people PORCH ENCLOSURES STORM-SCREEN DOORS-WINDOWS PRIME WINDOWS CMHC ACCEPTED "To Save Cash-- DOORS "CANADA PERMANENT DEBENTURES 5% for 2 years 4%% fot 1 year e A first class investment providing an excellent return plus complete security. @ Interest paid by cheque every six months; Or on presentation of coupon; or may be accumulated and paid with principal, @ A trustee investment. e Convenient to purchase and convenient to own. Write or telephone for explanatory folder and Application Form Saturday that creation of a Can- --the trappings are similar ada-Uniled States common mar- ket would rapidly lead to the loss of Canada's political inde- pendence Professor H. lan Macdonald, dean of men' at the University Toronte, said such a union would) produce supra-national institutions with the U.S. having the supreme voice in police matters. He told the Ontario Young Progressive Conservative Asso- ciation.that Canada must strive to he sympathetic to U.S. for- eigh policy but the worst that cou'd happen for both countr would be for Canada to become a helpless satellite. ent in background tions, and of the made power is one that have of in world affairs, he said" Canada is only a tus, he added. search director of the can nationa United States personally U.S | Vietnam, committee in said Saturday fnvors es they are 'fundamentally differ ambi- The belief that Canada is a big fallacies it difficult for Canada to find its proper role middle dow power and should concentrate on|and Jeft shrapnel imbeddeq in schemes appropriate to. its sta-\the wall of the house. «hes he he'of 'th committing ta troops to action in South standing some distance from his Police said they believe the Friday night blast resulted when grains of powder in the threads of the caps on cither end of the galvanized pipe ignited because of friction The blast threw the Fort and Provencher youths on the ground, smashed a kitchen win- dented an aluminum door, Fort bled to death from ab- Joseph Harrison, associate re- dominal, leg and forearm injur- Republi before aid reached him scaned the full cplosion and flying me he wa Go force because h aid MODELS to choose from FLEXALUM SIDING JALOUSIES ALUMATOPS FOR PICK-UP TRUCKS To odd heouty and comfort to your home. 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An 8-year-old can (1) name the months, (2) indicate another person's right or left, (3) classify in terms of similority, and (4) read faster silently than orally. Abstraction is a sign of intelligence. The average child under 6 years of age éan do little or no abstract thinking. When asked, 'What is an apple?" the reply is likely to be, 'Something to eot,".or "It is round and red ond you eat it." The overage 7- or 8-year-old will probably answer, 'It is_a fruit." Questions that demon- strate ability to do obstract thinking will help determine therchild's intelligence. ASPIRIN Q. Is it true thot aspirin couses internal bleeding ? A. A small, perhaps insignificant; number of people have trouble after taking aspirin, This drug. . . aspirin is a drug . . . apparently causes.stomach irritation in such persons, and the irritation may be accomponied by blood loss, sometimes in large amounts, However, the vast majority of people apparently tolerate normal amounts of aspirin without difficulty. We maintain full stocks of prescription drugs + «+ have the professional skill to disp them promptly . . . and the reputation to do 60 at reasonable prices. Address ___. ® FREE DELIVERY ®@ OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M, 723-4621 Scent PED LTE ILLES LIT